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Having Assurance of Salvation
Bob Jennings

Bob Jennings (January 2, 1949 – November 6, 2012) was an American preacher and pastor whose ministry focused on biblical fidelity, prayer, and preparing believers for eternity, leaving a profound impact within evangelical circles. Born in Kirksville, Missouri, to a family that shaped his early faith, he surrendered to Christ as a young man and began preaching in 1978 alongside Charles Leiter in Kirksville. In 1983, he became an elder at Highway M Chapel in Sedalia, Missouri, where he co-pastored for nearly three decades, emphasizing sound doctrine and a vibrant church community. Married to Terri since around 1970, he raised five children—Jared, Zachary, Evan, and two daughters—instilling in them the same spiritual devotion. Jennings’ preaching career gained wider reach through conferences, such as those with HeartCry Missionary Society alongside Paul Washer, and university outreaches in the U.S. and Eastern Europe, where his sermons on sin, grace, and Christ’s return resonated deeply. Diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2010, he chronicled his journey in an online journal (bobjenningsjournal.wordpress.com), offering meditations like “The most important thing in life is to be ready for death,” preached at a 2008 funeral. His final sermon, “Behold the Lamb of God” (2012), and a farewell letter to Sedalia reflect his unwavering hope in Christ. He died at 63, his sons having built his casket, buried in a rural Missouri cemetery after a life of humble, resolute ministry.
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Sermon Summary
This sermon emphasizes the importance of wholehearted devotion to God, highlighting the need to fully surrender and consecrate ourselves to Him without holding back. It discusses the issue of assurance and how it can be hindered by reservations in our hearts, stressing the significance of faith and walking closely with God. The sermon also shares powerful testimonies of individuals who faced challenges in their faith but found restoration and freedom through genuine repentance and trust in God's Word.
Sermon Transcription
Amaziah did that which is right in the sight of God, yet not with all his heart. Wow! Lord, don't let me have that on my tombstone. Don't let that be my biography. I did right in the sight of God, but not with all my heart. Help us. You know, a lot of times the problems with assurance come especially in our second category where, I mean, there's something that a person is holding back on. He's not fully consecrated, not fully devoted. He's fearful about this, anxious about this. His heart is not just given over, you know, and that can stop the flow. God is not going to give assurance and the witness of the Spirit on top of some reserve in our heart. And so if people would just plow themselves into God, they would find that assurance. They would find that sweetness. They'd find that intimacy like they never have before. And that's one place to, that's one thing to think about. But after having said all of that, you know, it comes down to this, and that is we are justified by faith and faith alone. We're saved by faith, not by assurance. And I've seen cases where, you know, here's a believer. He's proved out to be a true believer. But he fell into some sin. He fell into fornication. He had a fall, a terrible fall into fornication. And he repented of it. And God just stripped him of his assurance. I mean, he didn't know up from down. And he was tormented. He was in agony. Am I really in or not? Am I born again or not? And what we had to tell him was, don't worry about assurance. You just follow God. The issue you've got to settle right now is am I going to walk with God from here on out or not? And he began to do that and eventually had the joy of his salvation restored. Some of you might have heard of Wang Mingdao. He was a pastor in China during the communist takeover. And he was arrested. He and his wife both sent to prison. He was a very outspoken pastor, sent to prison. And during a time of brainwashing, severe brainwashing and isolation, he cracked under the pressure, recounted his faith, signed a confession. Immediately he was set free. But he was bound by the guilt and the depression of that and was known to have been wandering through the streets of his town saying, I am Peter, I am Judas. Until one day the Lord broke through with a miraculous breakthrough, brought a verse to his mind, to his heart. And he was instantly set free. It was one of those surprising visits of the Holy Spirit. Set him free. And he went back to the authorities and he said that document that I signed, it's not how I truly feel. I take it back. And they re-arrested him and he spent 24 years in a communist prison that eventually was released when he was 80 years old, toothless, blind and deaf from the tortures that he went through there. Are you really believing? Are you taking God at his word? Are you, and the Bible says he who believes in me has everlasting life and we're justified by faith. Are you really believing God, taking God at his word? And are you sincere? And then if he says yes, I would ask him, how is your walk? I mean, are you keeping up communion with God? Are you feeding your soul? Great peace have those who love thy law and nothing shall offend them. Great peace have those who love your law. I mean, are you reading the Bible regularly? Are you getting filled with the scripture? Is the word of God, word of Christ dwelling richly in you? If you're not taking time in the word of God, you're going to find some withholding assurance. You're going to find you do not have the joy in the Lord you ought to have, you could have. And the same way in prayer. I mean, again, the Lord is a rewarder of those who diligently seek him. What a man sows, he reaps. And so, you know, we could ask questions like that. And, you know, here you find out that a person is not regular in the word of God. Well, it's no wonder you have no assurance. You know, you look at that list in 2nd Timothy 3. He says in the last days, difficult times will come and we bolsters covetous, proud blasphemers and so on, disobedient to parents, fierce, heady and high minded. And it sounds like he's talking about the heathen, the pagans, those that don't even profess Christianity. But then he adds this phrase. They have a form of godliness, but they deny the power thereof from such turn away. They deny the power thereof. In other words, they deny regeneration, the power of God and regeneration and entertain the thought that you can be born again and still be no different than you were, be no different than the world is. And so he says from such turn away. It's a blasphemy. It's an insult to God. It's an insult to his power to think that you can be invaded by the living God and be no different than you were, no different than the world is, that you can still be basically living a life of sin. And he goes on to give other examples. You know, Janus and Jambres, they opposed Moses, they opposed the truth. And so that's what we're seeing in Christendom today is a very low view of regeneration. You can mention the verse there in 1 John 2, 4, and you can talk about keeping the commandments or you can refer to something like Matthew 7 and doing the will of the Father or you have the 1 John 3 and practicing righteousness. But there are always, um, I come across those individuals that want to take exception to those passages and or they want to ask the question, well, practicing righteousness isn't perfection. And so as soon as we fall from perfection, how far can we fall from that and still have it being a practicing of righteousness? There are those people that they really want to know where that line falls, which I think is probably an indication of something that's maybe not be right in the first place. But what do you do with all that? Yeah. Well, admittedly, it's not a two plus two equals four type of thing. And it must be acknowledged that there are different, differing degrees of fruitfulness and consecration from one Christian to another, some 30, some 60, some 100 fold. And, uh, but even 30 fold is significant, is substantial. And so we're not talking about perfection, but we are talking about obvious direction. Somebody who's been born again, he is obviously different than he was, different than the world. He is progressively seeing victory over sin. He's progressively seeing, um, uh, uh, conformity to Christ. And, and, um, that that's the main thing. I mean, you look at, you look at David's life. If you just looked at that one period of his life where he fell, you know, you would say no way, but you look at the big picture of his life and you can see, here's a man that he did love God. He did have a heart for God. He was after God's heart before and after the fall. And so, you know, it's, it's, it's altogether generally too obvious that, uh, this person, he does not really love the saints of God. It's kind of a burden for him to make the meetings. He doesn't just really enjoy it. He doesn't really enjoy the word of God. You know, the other day I asked somebody, uh, uh, how are you reading that Bible? You've got time in your hands. Are you reading that Bible? And he doesn't, he doesn't go to our church. And, uh, and he said, well, I, I, I've got this schedule. I'm, I may miss a day or two, but I, I've got this schedule and I catch up. And, uh, I mentioned Psalm one to him, you know, but his delight is in the law of the Lord and in his law, he meditates day and night. You know, is that, is that, that, that's the mark of a, of a born again person. He delights in the people of God and the word of God. He delights in prayer. And so that, uh, that's, uh, I think it's frequently just too obvious and where a person's really at.
Having Assurance of Salvation
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Bob Jennings (January 2, 1949 – November 6, 2012) was an American preacher and pastor whose ministry focused on biblical fidelity, prayer, and preparing believers for eternity, leaving a profound impact within evangelical circles. Born in Kirksville, Missouri, to a family that shaped his early faith, he surrendered to Christ as a young man and began preaching in 1978 alongside Charles Leiter in Kirksville. In 1983, he became an elder at Highway M Chapel in Sedalia, Missouri, where he co-pastored for nearly three decades, emphasizing sound doctrine and a vibrant church community. Married to Terri since around 1970, he raised five children—Jared, Zachary, Evan, and two daughters—instilling in them the same spiritual devotion. Jennings’ preaching career gained wider reach through conferences, such as those with HeartCry Missionary Society alongside Paul Washer, and university outreaches in the U.S. and Eastern Europe, where his sermons on sin, grace, and Christ’s return resonated deeply. Diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2010, he chronicled his journey in an online journal (bobjenningsjournal.wordpress.com), offering meditations like “The most important thing in life is to be ready for death,” preached at a 2008 funeral. His final sermon, “Behold the Lamb of God” (2012), and a farewell letter to Sedalia reflect his unwavering hope in Christ. He died at 63, his sons having built his casket, buried in a rural Missouri cemetery after a life of humble, resolute ministry.